Flowing Fluids and Pressure Variation: Pressure Differences Are (Often) The Forces That Move Fluids
Flowing Fluids and Pressure Variation: Pressure Differences Are (Often) The Forces That Move Fluids
Flowing Fluids and Pressure Variation: Pressure Differences Are (Often) The Forces That Move Fluids
Chapter 4
Lagrangian and Eulerian Descriptions of Fluid Motion For fluid mechanics, the more convenient description is
usually the Eulerian one:
Eulerian: Observer stays at a fixed point in space.
Lagrangian: Observer moves along with a given fluid particle.
When displacements get large (e.g. in fluid flow), the deforming A streamline is a line drawn through the flow field such that
grid gets problematic. But we sometimes use mixed the flow vector is tangent to it at every point at a given
approaches, e.g. Lagrangian tracers in a Eulerian frame. instant in time.
Flow is uniform if
Turbulence forms
mostly downstream
from the airfoil.
or
From last page, we For a simpler example, letʼs look at the material
had derivative of temperature T in one dimension: T(x,t)
This derivative is called the full derivative or material At a fixed point x0, a change
derivative. in temperature can be
It is often written D/Dt instead of d/dt. caused by two different
It can apply to other quantities as well. mechanisms:
1) The temperature of the local fluid particle changes
(e.g., due to heat conduction, radioactive heating,
etc…):
The full time derivative describes the change in time of a 2) All fluid particles keep their temperature, but the
certain property as we move along with the fluid. velocity u brings a new particle to x0 which has a
different temperature:
The changes are called “local change” and “convective Example 4.1 (p. 94): Find the acceleration half-way
change” (the convective change is also called “advective through the nozzle
change”)
Velocity is given as
= local temperature change
= local acceleration in x
Eulerian:
Now we shrink the fluid element to Uniform acceleration of a tank of liquid (Fig. 4.13)
and so that
Horizontal balance:
Eulerʼs equation
(force balance in Vertical balance: (hydrostatic!)
a moving fluid)
Derivation of the Bernoulli Equation: Recall what we just did to get the Bernoulli equation:
Start with Eulerʼs equation applied along a pathline: 1) Assume steady flow (donʼt apply this to anything else!)
2) Integrate forces (per volume) along a pathline.
Rotation of a fluid element in a rotating tank of fluid If the paddle wheel rotates, the flow is rotational at that
(solid body rotation). point.
The net rate of
rotation of the
bisector is
As
And similarly
The rotation rate we just found was that about the z-axis; The property more frequently used is the vorticity
hence, we may call it
and similarly
(V is function of r, only)
Forced vortex (interior) and We can find the pressure variation in different vortices
free vortex (outside):
In general:
Good approximation to
naturally occurring
1) Solid body rotation:
vortices such as
tornadoes.
with
Pressure as function of
z and r